Below is the last section of the notes I received for my script of Dig Down.
THEME:
I guess the theme here is what one does to be loved.
Rob wants the love of his father so he tries to be successful in his firm. He figures the more
money he makes the more his father may love him. Rob wants the love of his drug addicted
girlfriend so to escape with her and have enough money for her drug habit he risks his life.
I think that overall this theme plays out even if it is playing as a negative – corruption in the
company and keeping her addicted so he will be loved. It could play out stronger in many
different ways. For example – if that is the argument with his father that causes him to kill him.
It’s almost there already but gets buried in much of the over dialogue. It could play out with the
ex-wife if she is the only one who ever truly loved him and expresses that while he despises her.
It can play stronger with the girlfriend if she just loves anyone that has drugs and he sees it in
front of him – her own father her offers her coke to get her away from him in the final scenes.
Also shows the level of evil of Axel to do that to her.
There are so many ways this can play and this works all through conflict…
CONFLICT:
The character conflict in the story is very strong. Externally the conflict is obvious in that he is in
a fight for his and his girlfriend’s life.
However, on the inner level, there is no emotional conflict for the characters. Usually this is
found in their relationships or overcoming some wound they’ve incurred. However, this doesn’t
happen here. Even after her boyfriend dumps her, she gets on with things but the wound of the
relationship is never addressed. As part of the set up it makes the reader believe that this is the
story and genre. This will be a rom-com where she finds her true love and learns to love or trust
again but that doesn’t happen. A guy who is barely in the story just comes a long and she
marries him. Paul and her never address their internal issues and we don’t know if Paul really
has any.
Having these emotional and internal issues will make the characters far more interesting to
follow and up the conflict of the story.
WRITING CRAFT:
This is a big one. This is where you can take your craft and script to the next level in small easy
ways.
First things I come across are formatting and order of operations. Let’s start by talking about the
Mind Movie. This is the movie playing in your head that you are putting on paper for someone
to read to transfer to their head. The goal is to get that to transfer completely seamlessly and
have the same vision of that movie in your head play in theirs. To do that we need clarity and
for the order of operations to be perfect. We also need a way to direct that mind movie without
seeming like we are directing and taking away the directors job. But if you write it strong
enough, that director will make the movie you envisioned. Not only do you want to break things
up to direct the mind movie but you also want to get the order of operations right. Remember, a
screenplay is the architectural plans for a movie.
Writing in Present Tense – Make everything present tense. Nothing should be in a state of being.
It’s a show, so things just happen as we see them. So, don’t use present progressive where you
can use present. You don’t do this often but once in a while. That means getting rid of any –ing
ending verbs. We are seeing it as it happens not in the process of happening. Remember –
everything in a movie happens as we see it. Run through the script and check line by line that
you are cleaning these up. This also means all your parentheticals. The goal of the script is to
transfer the mind movie in your head to the reader’s head. You want the mind movie to play for
them so you want to write in present tense to smooth the movie playing in their mind. It makes
the story active and creates the image in the mind of watching it rather than reading something
in the past. Also, nothing “begins to” or “starts to” happen. Cut these and use the active voice.
Remember, your descriptions shouldn’t be more than three (3) lines per paragraph but most of
your three line paragraphs could be cut down from what I read. The idea is to make the page
light (meaning lots of white space) so that you have a fast read and the dialogue pops. Look for
anything extra to cut and trim. But definitely look at breaking up the description by each
different shot. Every time you imagine a different movement or shot or angle in the description
break that into a new paragraph. This will also help with the mind movie and help you direct the
film in the producer and director’s mind without them thinking that you are.
Use the Mind Movie to break up description by shots and that will help play it int he reader’s
head. The more you can get the reader to see the movie playing in their head the more likely
you are to sell the script. For the most part you do this well. However, you should run through
the script as an editing exercise to make sure that the mind movie matches what is on the page.
There are times you fall out of doing it and there are elements – flashbacks, slug lines, dialogue
gaps – that you need to clean up to match the vision that would be on screen.
To help with writing description try to think of it as if writing a poem. You want to write
something that is visual and emotional and active in the shortest for possible. This is the goal of
writing description and will help your story flow more smoothly.
Hangers – These are when you have a bunch of single words on a line or just a few words. If you
have a bunch of hangers, it’s a sign you can run through the script and start finding ways to cut
down the description. This will help you bring down your page count and just create a cleaner
read and visual of the page.
Adverbs – Another aspect of showing versus telling is the use of adverbs. Anytime you come
across an adverb as yourself how you are seeing this. How do you picture this in the movie. The
more specific the answer the clear the vision will be for the reader. When you are specific with
verbs and nouns in this way, you really hook people in. You trigger memories and emotions in
them with more specific words. Then you are creating an emotional connection with them that
pulls them into your story.
Your dialogue needs to be cut way back. Look for anything that is duplicate information and cut
it. Search for anything that is telling past events that could be shown and show it. You have the
voices down for most characters but the dialogue is too much. It should be shorter and sharper
and less explaining what happened. Movies SHOW, novels TELL.
So there is a lot here to digest. I look forward to speaking with you as I think that small changes
will really dial in the story you want to tell and how to tell it.